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The perimeters of similar triangles are in the same ratio as the corresponding sides

Answers: always, never, sometimss

User Ayrton
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4 votes

Answer:

Always

Explanation:

Suppose you have triangle ABC with side lengths a, b, c. Suppose that is similar to triangle DEF with side lengths d, e, f.

Now, let k be the ratio of corresponding sides ...

k = d/a

Because the same factor applies to all sides, we also have ...

k = e/b = f/c

That is, if we multiply by the denominators of each of these fractions, we get ...

  • d = a·k
  • e =b·k
  • f = c·k

The perimeter of ΔABC is ...

perimeter(ABC) = a + b + c

The perimeter of ΔDEF is ...

perimeter(DEF) = d + e + f = a·k + b·k + c·k

perimeter(DEF) = k(a + b + c) = k·perimeter(ABC)

k = perimeter(DEF)/perimeter(ABC)

That is, the perimeters are in the same ratio as corresponding sides.

User Brad Barker
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